Virginia voters headed to the polls on Tuesday to decide a single ballot question: whether to amend the state constitution to allow the General Assembly to draw new congressional districts aimed at 'restoring fairness' ahead of upcoming elections. The proposed maps would give Democrats an advantage in 10 of the state's 11 U.S. House seats, despite Kamala Harris winning less than 52% of the presidential vote there in 2024. Campaigns on both sides have drawn complaints of confusion from misleading ads, mailers and ballot wording.
The ballot measure asks: 'Should the Constitution of Virginia be amended to allow the General Assembly to temporarily adopt new congressional districts to restore fairness in the upcoming elections, while ensuring Virginia's standard redistricting process resumes for all future redistricting after the 2030 census?' Proponents, including Democratic Gov. Abigail Spanberger and former President Barack Obama, frame it as a response to Republican-led redistricting in states like Texas. Opponents call it extreme gerrymandering in a politically divided state where Democrats currently hold 6 of 11 seats, roughly matching the popular vote split under existing maps, according to analyses cited by the Daily Wire and NPR reporting on voter concerns as first reported by VPM News and NPR affiliates. Senate President Pro Tempore Louise Lucas described the move as retaliation for Texas's mid-decade changes, where Harris received 42% of the vote but Democrats gained seats in 21% of districts—a smaller disparity than Virginia's proposed shift from 52% to 91% Democratic seats. Voter confusion has dominated the race, with groups Virginians for Fair Elections (pro-redistricting) and Virginians for Fair Maps (opposed) using similar names. Mailers featured contradictory images of Spanberger and Obama, while TV ads repurposed old clips of Obama decrying gerrymandering against the yes vote. One voter, Randi Buerlein in Hanover County, described a polling booth display misleadingly using Spanberger's image to say 'Don't be fooled.' Another, Casey Czajkowski in Goochland County, called the ballot language itself misleading. Dark money fuels the fight: the yes side raised over $64 million, largely undisclosed, from groups like The Fairness Project and House Majority Forward linked to U.S. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries; the no side got $19 million from its own nonprofit. Early voting turnout tracked close to 2025 gubernatorial levels, per the Virginia Public Access Project.